I ran into this after not buying anything new in a while (really don't need new games) If you have anything in your steam wallet from past items being sold, you can use that for the requirement of buying something, look for just a cheap classic, usually they can be $0.99 or so on steam sales. I found that works to get back to being able to trade again
Coolcoder360
This sounds like a good book to me, really hope you find it again as I know what it's like to vaguely remember some show, movie, or book from years ago and not know what it was called or how to find it again.
Definitely would love to read it if you find it, that sounds like a great book.
As long as you don't get the runs in your jeans.
Forget that person, I'm just waiting for you to get to spirited away.
Kroger is a grocery store chain in the US, I suspect they don't operate in Germany but I might be wrong.
They basically are or own many different grocery store chains across most of the US.
Well, the reason dying in death match is faster in CS2 is because now it's FFA, pretty sure in csgo it was team death match.
So now everyone is out to get you, not just the other team.
I love the offer of almost $15k to then say they can bargain if the users are active, like if it's worth that much without active users then that's definitely shady.
Granted, Fairphone had to entirely do the BSP and entire update themselves because the SoC vendor doesn't support A13.
The real issue here isn't with the OEMs it's the chip set vendors not supporting Android as long.
I suspect many of them aren't humble at all though.
The Fairphone. Fairphone 2 was updated from Android 5 through 10 (5 years on the latest version) Fairphone 3 started at 9 and is currently on Android 13, that's five years, and hasn't had it's last update yet.
That's two Android phones with at least 5 years on the latest OS, and Fairphone 2 got patch updates until this year, giving it support and updates from 2014 until 2023
Agree, also confused because Debian seemed to get security updates rather frequently when I've used it.
That's like their whole thing, stable and security updates. I would be curious if there are examples of exploits that weren't patched quickly on Debian stable.